This is the second time this matter has come before us. The plaintiffs are abutters to and neighbors of a conservation development subdivision (CDS) proposed by the intervenor, Graystone Builders, Inc. (Graystone). Graystone appeals a ruling of the Superior Court
(Houran,
J.) granting the plaintiffs’ motion for entry of a final order reversing the planning board’s approval of the CDS proposal after we previously remanded the matter to the superior court. Graystone argues that the trial court’s ruling is not consistent with our mandate in
Auger v. Town of Strafford,
The facts of the underlying case can be found in our previous decision regarding this matter.
See Auger,
In Auger, we addressed three issues pertaining to the CDS proposal and two pertaining to the yield plan. First, as to the CDS proposal, we held that the board applied the wrong standard in its waiver of the regulation prohibiting more than ten lots on a dead-end street. Id. at 67. Rather than requiring evidence that Graystone would suffer undue hardship or injustice were it required to strictly apply this regulation, the board waived the requirement because “it preferred the cul-de-sac configuration” as opposed to a loop configuration. Id. We therefore reversed the superior court’s decision to uphold the board’s approval of the CDS proposal and remanded the issue for further proceedings consistent with our opinion. Id.
In the interest of judicial economy, we addressed the four remaining arguments. We declined to decide the second issue, regarding the board’s alleged failure to review the environmental impact of the proposed CDS upon a nearby lake, because the plaintiffs failed to develop the issue sufficiently for our review. Id. at 68. As to the third issue concerning the CDS proposal, we affirmed the superior court’s ruling that the plaintiffs’ procedural due process rights were not violated when a board member voted on the CDS proposal even though he missed two of the multiple hearings on the issue. Id. at 68-69.
As to the yield plan, we first held that the superior court erred in remanding the matter to obtain the necessary information for determining whether the yield plan complied with applicable wetland regulations.
Id.
at 69-70. Because there
On remand, the plaintiffs filed a motion for entry of a final order reversing the board’s approval of the CDS proposal and yield plan. Graystone objected, arguing that our mandate required further proceedings; specifically, that the superior court remand the matter to the board to apply the undue hardship standard and determine whether Graystone would suffer any undue hardship justifying the waiver of the ten-lot limit. Graystone also filed a motion requesting a stay and conditional mediation, to which the plaintiffs objected. The superior court granted the plaintiffs’ motion and, as a result, ruled that Graystone’s motion was moot. Graystone appealed the ruling.
On appeal, Graystone argues that the superior court: (1) erred in its interpretation of the mandate in Auger, (2) violated Graystone’s due process rights by not considering its substantial investment in the CDS approval process; and (3) erred in failing to consider the town’s goal of avoiding further litigation and denying Graystone’s motion for a stay to enter mediation.
We first address the superior court’s implementation of the mandate in
Auger.
As a general proposition, the trial court is bound by the mandate of an appellate court on remand.
State v. Abram,
In implementing the mandate, “the trial court need not read the mandate in a vacuum, but rather has the opinion of [this] court to aid it. In this way, the trial court may examine the rationale of an appellate opinion in order to discern the meaning of language in the court’s mandate.” Id. (quotation, brackets and ellipses omitted). Indeed, the proceedings on remand must be in accordance with both the mandate of this court and the result contemplated in the opinion. Id.
Generally, a trial court is free upon remand to “take such action as law and justice may require under the circumstances as long as it is not inconsistent with the mandate and judgment of [this] court.”
Id.
at 651 (citing 5 C.J.S.
Appeal and Error
§ 1136 (2007)). Because appellate judgments are not self-executing, trial courts have some degree of flexibility in their implementation.
Id.
Therefore, insofar as our opinion in a case does not conclusively decide the parties’ rights in the subject matter of the suit, the trial court has some discretion in implementing the mandate.
See
id.;
see also In re Sanford Fork & Tool Co.,
Here, Graystone argues that our opinion in Auger did not make a conclusive determination as to the parties’ rights, but rather reversed the superior court’s ruling and remanded for further proceedings. Specifically, Graystone contends that we remanded the case so that the board could have a chance to apply the correct standard and decide whether there was any undue hardship or injustice meriting a waiver of the ten-lot limit. Thus, Graystone argues, the superior court exceeded its discretion in implementing our mandate by summarily reversing the board’s approval of the CDS proposal. The plaintiffs respond that, because there was insufficient evidence to support any finding of hardship, the superior court correctly reversed the board’s approval of the CDS proposal rather than remanding.
Although we acknowledge that the mandate was not entirely free from ambiguity, in the context of our opinion in
Auger,
the mandate required that the superior court remand the matter to the board for further proceedings concerning the waiver of the ten-lot limit.
See Auger,
Ordinarily, we will remand unresolved factual issues for analysis under the correct legal standard, unless the record reveals that a reasonable fact finder necessarily would reach a certain conclusion, in which case we may decide the issue as a matter of law.
See Johnson v. Town of Wolfeboro Planning Bd.,
The plaintiffs, however, argue that notwithstanding the waiver issue, the CDS proposal cannot be remanded because the yield plan was reversed. In the absence of a yield plan, they argue, there can be no CDS. Indeed, the superior court adopted the same approach. It recognized that the
Section 1.4.3(A)(8) of the Strafford Zoning Ordinance states that the board “may require a yield plan ... to determine the maximum number of lots.” Such a plan, as the superior court recognized, is not necessary if the board so chooses.
See Duffy v. City of Dover,
Because we hold that the superior court erred in reversing the board’s approval of the CDS, we need not address Graystone’s remaining arguments.
Reversed and remanded.
